Pakistan upgrades animal health, cold-chain systems to tap halal meat exports to Malaysia

In this picture taken on December 6, 2018, Pakistani butcher Nisar Charsi prepares meat in his restaurant in Namak Mandi in Peshawar. (AFP/ FILE)
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Updated 21 November 2025
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Pakistan upgrades animal health, cold-chain systems to tap halal meat exports to Malaysia

  • Islamabad is targeting up to $200 million in halal meat exports to Malaysia
  • Malaysia is among Southeast Asia’s most regulated halal meat markets

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has begun upgrading its foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) testing capacity, grazing systems and cold-chain infrastructure as it targets up to $200 million in halal meat exports to Malaysia, according to an official statement issued on Thursday.

The push comes as Pakistan seeks deeper access to Southeast Asia’s high-value halal markets, where strict animal-health and traceability requirements have historically limited exports. The government says technical upgrades and regulatory compliance are now central to its strategy to diversify beyond traditional sectors and expand processed food exports.

Malaysia is among Southeast Asia’s most regulated halal meat markets, relying heavily on imports from Australia, New Zealand and India to meet domestic demand. The country’s halal certification standards are considered a benchmark across the region, with strict requirements on disease control, cold-chain management and slaughtering processes. Gaining deeper access to Malaysia not only expands Pakistan’s presence in a high-value consumer market but also opens pathways into wider ASEAN halal supply chains, industry officials say.

On Thursday, a high-level meeting of the Prime Minister’s Committee on Meat Exports to Malaysia was held, co-chaired by Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan and Special Assistant to the Prime Minister Haroon Akhtar Khan.

“The committee proposed an ambitious target of USD 200 million worth of meat exports to Malaysia,” a statement released by the press information department said. 

Minister Khan highlighted “the need to upgrade Pakistan’s grazing areas, establish FMD vaccine laboratories, and introduce targeted incentives for exporters, calling these measures essential and time-critical for tapping into the Malaysian market.”

He highlighted that a “collaborative business model is being developed with private exporters to streamline and boost meat shipments.”

SAPM Haroon Akhtar reaffirmed that a “comprehensive export strategy” was being crafted on the prime minister’s directives and Pakistan was “fully prepared and globally compliant for the export of boneless meat, while work continues on a viable framework for bone-in meat exports.”

A draft export plan will be submitted to the prime minister after consultations with industry stakeholders, the statement said, adding that as the SAPM underscored the importance of improving processing systems, cold-chain infrastructure and export-ready mechanisms to enhance Pakistan’s competitiveness in international markets.


Pakistan detains five men deported from Sharjah for using fake UK visas

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Pakistan detains five men deported from Sharjah for using fake UK visas

  • The group was taken into custody at Lahore airport and handed to the Anti-Human Smuggling Circle
  • FIA says the five men obtained forged UK visas through agents after traveling to Malaysia this year

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani authorities detained five citizens at Lahore airport after they were deported from Sharjah for attempting to travel to the United Kingdom on forged British visas, the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) said on Saturday.

The five men had initially traveled from Lahore to Malaysia earlier this year on visit visas, the agency said.

After their stay in Malaysia, it added, they allegedly tried to fly onward to the UK from Sharjah using counterfeit documents obtained through agents.

“Five Pakistani passengers were deported from Sharjah for possessing fake British visas,” the FIA said in its statement. “Upon arrival at Lahore airport, the deported passengers were taken into custody.”

Pakistan has tightened its crackdown on illegal immigration and human smuggling in recent years after a series of deadly boat tragedies involving its citizens attempting to reach Europe.

In July, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said the government was targeting organized criminal networks and urging the public to use safe and legal pathways for overseas employment.

He said the state was expanding job opportunities at home and abroad but warned that irregular migration routes were dangerous and violated national and international law.

The FIA said all five men had been transferred to the Anti-Human Smuggling Circle in Lahore for further investigation.

According to its statement, the forged travel documents were acquired with the assistance of intermediaries, leading authorities in the United Arab Emirates to deny them entry and deport them to Pakistan.

The FIA said the inquiry into the visa fraud and the agents involved was ongoing.